Animal Biotelemetry (Aug 2020)

Autonomous underwater videography and tracking of basking sharks

  • L. A. Hawkes,
  • O. Exeter,
  • S. M. Henderson,
  • C. Kerry,
  • A. Kukulya,
  • J. Rudd,
  • S. Whelan,
  • N. Yoder,
  • M. J. Witt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40317-020-00216-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background Biologging studies have revealed a wealth of information about the spatio-temporal movements of a wide range of vertebrates large enough to carry electronic tracking tags. Advances in autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs or UAVs) and unmanned aerial vehicles (commonly known as drones), which can carry far larger payloads of sensor technologies, have revealed insights into the environment through which animals travel. Some AUVs have been used to film target animals, but are generally limited to periods as long as a drone operator can actively follow an animal. In the present study, we use an AUV, the REMUS-100 SharkCam, paired with a custom transponder tag attached to the shark, to autonomously follow three basking sharks for a cumulative total of 10.9 h to collect video and environmental data on their sub-surface behaviour. The basking shark is the second largest fish in the world and is endangered globally, but despite being subject to various biologging studies, little is known of this species breeding ecology and their mating grounds remain unknown. Results We detail the first successful autonomous tracking of basking sharks, comprising three missions that filmed basking sharks in mid-water and close to benthic habitats. Sharks spent very little time feeding, and travelled relatively close to sandy, rocky and algae-covered benthos. One basking shark was observed defecating. Conspecifics were not observed in the three missions, nor were courtship or breeding behaviours. AUV offset distances for videography were determined iteratively through tracking. These offsets varied depending on the trade-off of between water clarity and proximity of the AUV for obtaining useful video data and directly influencing shark behaviour. Conclusions The present study is the first successful use of an AUV to gain insight into the sub-surface behaviour of basking sharks.

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